There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

cooking

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

Muzukun , in Moving from an electric stovetop to a gas range
@Muzukun@yiffit.net avatar

Temp responsiveness is just immediate. Don’t have to wait for the coils to heat up/cool down, kind of makes cooking more fun :)

drudoo , in Pasta machine recommendation

We use one that attaches to our kitchen aid mixer and it’s amazing. So fast and easy to use.

JaCrispy ,

This is what I use too and I really like it

tjhart85 ,
@tjhart85@kbin.social avatar

Us too. We had one like in the OP's pic and it worked great for years, but, the attachment is on another level.

Combine that with the cheese grater and you're most of the way to heaven.

bmck ,
@bmck@lemmy.bmck.au avatar

I really wanted to get that one but the price tag was a bit prohibitive. In .au I was looking at ~$150 for each attachment, and I’d need one for each roller - laminator, spaghetti, fettuccini.

I ended up getting a manual one which does the trick - I’m never making pasta for more than 4 people.

Milx ,

Me too. If you have a mixer already it’s worth it.

Cris_Color , (edited ) in Need a new rice cooker
@Cris_Color@lemmy.world avatar

Zojirushi is the universal answer, just like kitchen aid for stand mixers, but I will say I quite like my Joseph Joseph microwave rice cooker, since I dont have to take a thing out and plug it in, and I can just stick the whole thing in the fridge once I make rice. Zojirushi is almost undoubtedly much nicer though, especially if you want a traditional rice maker

RickAllensLeftArm , in Alton Brown Shaming

I briefly followed him on Twitter years ago and quickly saw that he was a complete asshole.

lurch , in I finally did it: ruined a dish with too much garlic

one mans trash is another ones treasure

thrawn21 OP , in Many berry pie with rosemary lemon ice cream
@thrawn21@lemmy.world avatar

https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/dd514ce5-dd52-448d-84fe-2f1a4e7790e8.jpeg

For some reason I can’t add this to the main post, but here’s the pie and ice cream before serving.

niucllos , in Any tips on making quesidillas?

Any particular area/aspect you’re looking to improve?

VanHalbgott OP ,

Cooking it on the stove.

It cooks pretty fast to me.

Taco2112 ,

The one you made looks excellent, I cook them quite a bit but I usually just put cheese inside. If I’m filling it with veggies or chicken, I always cook that stuff first.

If you try and go low and slow, you’re going to end up with a hard crackly tortilla, cooking quick keeps it chewy and crisp on the outside.

On my electric stove, the dials go from 1-10 and I find that for my stove, preheating my cast iron pan with the burner on 4 keeps it from burning but cooks it pretty quick.

popcap200 ,

Is the cheese not getting melted? I’d say turn down the heat. Maybe put a lid on top? The Browning looks fantastic, a weight can help though to get it even better!

JoMiran , in Any tips on making quesidillas?
@JoMiran@lemmy.ml avatar

Use quality ingredients.

BillibusMaximus ,

To piggyback on this comment - if you normally use store-bought tortillas, try making your own instead. They’re easy and cheap to make, and taste way better IMO. (Plus they won’t have all the preservatives and other additives).

All you need is flour, a fat (traditionally lard, but I’ve also used butter, ghee, olive oil, or bacon grease with good success), some salt, water, and a skillet or griddle. Some people also use baking powder, but I think it’s fine without (I prefer my tortillas to be chewy rather than fluffy).

TexasDrunk ,

Butter works great. I live near an HEB where they make fresh tortillas every day and love to pick up the butter ones.

Anticorp , in Pan frying a steak butter vs oil

I used to run a cooking blog, so I’ve watched dozens of world renown chefs prepare steak, and I’ve tested many different methods myself. The most popular and tasty method by far is to brush the steak with olive oil and sear it over high heat, finish cooking at lower heat, and then baste it with butter when it is finished. You can either baste it with butter in the pan, adding aromatics as desired, or just brush it down with butter and let it rest. There’s an internet trendy reverse sear method where you bake it at low heat first, and then finish it over high heat to obtain the sear, but the butter would still be applied after all of that, as the last step before resting.

Fizz OP ,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

This has been such a great thread I have so many new tricks to try out. I’m gonna have to buy more steak. I really want to try out the baking then sear. What heat would I bake it and for how long? Could I use an air fryer?

Anticorp ,

Here’s a reverse sear recipe from America’s Test Kitchen. Their recipes are heavily tested and usually outstanding, although frequently over-complicated. If you don’t want to invest all the time into it, then you can just use their baking instructions and do your own thing for the seasoning. I haven’t heard of using an air fryer for cooking steak, so you’re on your own there. If I had to guess, I’d say it might dry it out a little, so maybe not the best approach.

Kolanaki , in Pan frying a steak butter vs oil
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

When you cook it in butter, you’re gonna wanna actively continue to baste the butter over the meat and just keep it moving so it doesn’t burn, and you would first sear the steak at high heat, then cook the rest of the way at a lower temp while you’re applying the butter and herbs and stuff.

Geometrinen_Gepardi , in Pan frying a steak butter vs oil

Mix oil and butter to increase the smoke point. Or sear in oil and baste with butter at the end.

FuglyDuck , in Pan frying a steak butter vs oil
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

The simplest is to just lower the heat. Set the steak in there and let it get its crust by letting it… sit there.

Don’t keep flipping it. A good sear comes from good, even heating and the time+temperature. Lower the temperature and increase the time.

The caveat to that is it may come out slightly more well done. Especially particularly thin cuts. To solve that, instead start with canola and add butter after the sear. (Sear one side, reduce temp, add butter and cook the other side without flipping.)

mipadaitu , in Pan frying a steak butter vs oil

I like to use bacon fat.

Fizz OP ,
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

I like the way you think. I need to try that.

mipadaitu ,

www.youtube.com/channel/UCfE5Cz44GlZVyoaYTHJbuZw

Gustavo Tosta - aka Guga Foods - has a channel on YouTube where he does a lot of experiments with cooking steaks. Some of them are crazy $1,000+ steak recipes. Some of them are literal dollar store steaks cooked in a pan. They don’t always work out, but if you REALLY want to know how things change when you cook steaks in different ways, this is a really fun resource to follow.

Death_Equity ,

Bacon fat is great stuff for steak searing. Plus it is an excuse to cook large amounts of bacon. I guess you can buy it, but then you don’t have bacon.

Kolanaki , in I have 2 dozen eggs to use up
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Mayonnaise or ass loads of meringue.

berryjam OP ,

Above my skill level unfortunately

Kolanaki ,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar
berryjam OP ,

Meringue is difficult right?

Kolanaki ,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Physically yes. It’s just a lot of whipping. Skill wise, the hardest part is separating the yolks.

berryjam OP ,

Yeah so it is difficult. I don’t have an electric mixer and I don’t fancy doing it by hand

Dendr0 , in I have 2 dozen eggs to use up

Breakfast Bake:

Brown up some bacon, potatoes and onion. Doesn't have to be cooked soft, but "al dente" is fine.
Crack some eggs into a casserole dish, add in the browned up stuff. Bake at 325~ F for like 15~ minutes or until the egg is cooked.
Throw some cheese on top for the last 5 minutes of baking if you're feeling adventurous.

No real recipe as the amounts dont matter too much other than using enough eggs to cover the browned filling. If you use a glass dish, with the exception of the very edge, should also be relatively non-stick, so easy clean-up.

berryjam OP ,

Hmm, I don’t have cheese at home but I’ll try this over the weekend. Any particular kind of cheese you’d recommend?

waz ,

I’ve never made this personally, but I think Cheddar always works with eggs, potatoes and bacon.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • [email protected]
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines